Venus Wounded by a Rose's Thorn

Cleveland Museum of Art

Venus Wounded by a Rose's Thorn

Marco Dente

Date
c. 1516
Medium
engraving
Culture
Italy, 16th century
Department
Prints
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This composition alludes to The Lament for Adonis by the Greek poet Bion (active about 100 BCE). In the poem, Venus, distraught by the death of her lover Adonis, wanders barefoot in the woods and is wounded by brambles. Although Bion implores Venus to “weep no longer in the thickets,” the poem does not describe the moment depicted here when she plucks a thorn from her foot, imaginatively conceived as a vehicle to present a classical female nude. The wide-eyed hare near Venus is an ancient symbol of fertility and sexual desire. The story featured here has been used to explain why some roses are red: they were stained with the blood of Venus after she pricked herself while walking in the forest.

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